Memory Encoding Following Complete Callosotomy
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Vol. 9 (1) , 143-159
- https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn.1997.9.1.143
Abstract
Three patients with complete resection of the corpus callosum were tested in a series of memory tasks to determine the effects of callosotomy on the encoding and retrieval of information in memory. Verbal and pictorial conjunction tests were administered to measure patients' ability to consolidate the elements of a stimulus into an accurate composite memory. Patients were also tested in a paired-associate learning task to determine the consequences of callosotomy on the encoding and retrieval of associations between stimuli. Although callosotomy patients were unimpaired in the verbal conjunction task, results from both the pictorial conjunction task and the paired-associate learning task suggest that the absence of callosal cross-talk impairs encoding in these patients. In addition, the pattern of results in the paired-associate learning task suggests that callosotomy impairs retrieval processes. The role of the callosum in the formation of memory traces for nonverbal material and associations between verbal stimuli is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impaired use of organizational strategies in free recall following frontal lobe damageNeuropsychologia, 1995
- Cognitive Binding: A Computational-Modeling Analysis of a Distinction between Implicit and Explicit MemoryJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1992
- Hemispheric differences in mnemonic processing: The effects of left hemisphere interpretationNeuropsychologia, 1992
- Separable Mechanisms in Face Processing: Evidence from Hemispheric SpecializationJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1991
- Organization of the Human BrainScience, 1989
- Phonological Reading: Phenomena and ParadoxesCortex, 1986
- Neurologic Perspectives on Right Hemisphere Language Following Surgical Section of the Corpus CallosumSeminars in Neurology, 1984
- A feature-integration theory of attentionCognitive Psychology, 1980
- Chunking and consolidation: A theoretical synthesis of semantic networks, configuring in conditioning, S-R versus cognitive learning, normal forgetting, the amnesic syndrome, and the hippocampal arousal system.Psychological Review, 1979
- COGNITION AND COMMISSUROTOMYBrain, 1977